The report of the Union debate, which is published on the first page, contains a summary of all the arguments on the question of the university club.
The supreme court of the Pow-Wow for the year 1887-88 will be as follows: Messrs. Anderson, Coolidge, Hansen, Merriam, Nutter, Sanford, E. I. Smith, and R. D. Smith.
In the list of editors of the "Harvard Law Review" recently published, the name of P. C. Ransom was accidentally omitted as an editor from the first year class.
The new catalogues show that Amherst has 331 students and Williams 290. There are 19 professors and 7 instructors at Amherst and 16 professors and 5 instructors at Williams. - Ex.
Mr. Forchheimer has reconsidered his resignation from the leadership of the Pierian Sodality, which he tendered at its last meeting. He will conduct the orchestra for the rest of the year.
An examination in a certain course here was postponed the other day on account of the ignorance of the members of the course. It is to be hoped that such a good precedent may be generally followed.
The winter meeting of the Yale Athletic Association was held Tuesday evening. The following were some of the records made: Putting the sixteen-pound shot, 35 feet; running high jump, 5 feet 6 1-2 inches; standing broad jump, 10 feet 1-2 inches.
Certain base-ball worthies at Harvard have met with a rebuff. When these fierce old ladies in boys' clothing invited Yale to join them in their little scheme for monopolizing public interest in college games, they received a courteous slap in the face, which, we trust, will have a beneficial effect. Such a scheme is all very nice and select, but it savors much more of the tea-pot than the open field. There is something melancholy yet comic in this endeavor to exclude from direct competition such a college as Columbia, for instance, whose agile nine are the present champions. - Life. Ah, indeed.